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Featured researches published by Kami Kim.


Nature Communications | 2016

Local admixture of amplified and diversified secreted pathogenesis determinants shapes mosaic Toxoplasma gondii genomes

Hernan Lorenzi; Asis Khan; Michael S. Behnke; Sivaranjani Namasivayam; Lakshmipuram S. Swapna; Michalis Hadjithomas; Svetlana Karamycheva; Deborah F. Pinney; Brian P. Brunk; James W. Ajioka; Daniel Ajzenberg; John C. Boothroyd; Jon P. Boyle; Marie Laure Dardé; Maria A. Diaz-Miranda; J. P. Dubey; Heather M. Fritz; Solange Maria Gennari; Brian D. Gregory; Kami Kim; Jeroen Saeij; C. Su; Michael W. White; Xing Quan Zhu; Daniel K. Howe; Benjamin M. Rosenthal; Michael E. Grigg; John Parkinson; Liang Liu; Jessica C. Kissinger

Toxoplasma gondii is among the most prevalent parasites worldwide, infecting many wild and domestic animals and causing zoonotic infections in humans. T. gondii differs substantially in its broad distribution from closely related parasites that typically have narrow, specialized host ranges. To elucidate the genetic basis for these differences, we compared the genomes of 62 globally distributed T. gondii isolates to several closely related coccidian parasites. Our findings reveal that tandem amplification and diversification of secretory pathogenesis determinants is the primary feature that distinguishes the closely related genomes of these biologically diverse parasites. We further show that the unusual population structure of T. gondii is characterized by clade-specific inheritance of large conserved haploblocks that are significantly enriched in tandemly clustered secretory pathogenesis determinants. The shared inheritance of these conserved haploblocks, which show a different ancestry than the genome as a whole, may thus influence transmission, host range and pathogenicity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Toxoplasma gondii purine nucleoside phosphorylase: Biochemical characterization, inhibitor profiles and comparison with the plasmodium falciparum ortholog

Kshitiz Chaudhary; Li Min Ting; Kami Kim; David S. Roos

Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) is an important component of the nucleotide salvage pathway in apicomplexan parasites and a potential target for drug development. The intracellular pathogen Toxoplasma gondii was therefore tested for sensitivity to immucillins, transition state analogs that exhibit high potency against PNP in the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Growth of wild-type T. gondii is unaffected by up to 10 μm immucillin-H (ImmH), but mutants lacking the (redundant) purine salvage pathway enzyme adenosine kinase are susceptible to the drug, with an IC50 of 23 nm. This effect is rescued by the reaction product hypoxanthine, but not the substrate inosine, indicating that ImmH acts via inhibition of T. gondii PNP. The primary amino acid sequence of TgPNP is >40% identical to PfPNP, and recombinant enzymes exhibit similar kinetic parameters for most substrates. Unlike the Plasmodium enzyme, however, TgPNP cannot utilize 5′-methylthio-inosine (MTI). Moreover, TgPNP is insensitive to methylthio-immucillin-H (MT-ImmH), which inhibits PfPNP with a \batchmode \documentclass[fleqn,10pt,legalpaper]{article} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amsmath} \pagestyle{empty} \begin{document} \(K_{i}^{{\ast}}\) \end{document} of 2.7 nm. MTI arises through the deamination of methylthio-adenosine, a product of the polyamine biosynthetic pathway, and its further metabolism to hypoxanthine involves PfPNP in purine recycling (in addition to salvage). Remarkably, analysis of the recently completed T. gondii genome indicates that polyamine biosynthetic machinery is completely lacking in this species, obviating the need for TgPNP to metabolize MTI. Differences in purine and polyamine metabolic pathways among members of the phylum Apicomplexa and these parasites and their human hosts are likely to influence drug target selection strategies. Targeting T. gondii PNP alone is unlikely to be efficacious for treatment of toxoplasmosis.


Malaria Journal | 2008

Characterization of two putative potassium channels in Plasmodium falciparum

Karena L. Waller; Sean M.J. McBride; Kami Kim; Thomas V. McDonald

BackgroundPotassium channels are essential for cell survival and participate in the regulation of cell membrane potential and electrochemical gradients. During its lifecycle, Plasmodium falciparum parasites must successfully traverse widely diverse environmental milieus, in which K+ channel function is likely to be critical. Dramatically differing conditions will be presented to the parasite in the mosquito mid-gut, red blood cell (RBC) cytosol and the human circulatory system.MethodsIn silico sequence analyses identified two open-reading frames in the P. falciparum genome that are predicted to encode for proteins with high homology to K+ channels. To further analyse these putative channels, specific antisera were generated and used in immunoblot and immunofluorescence analyses of P. falciparum-infected RBCs. Recombinant genome methods in cultured P. falciparum were used to create genetic knock outs of each K+ channel gene to asses the importance of their expression.ResultsImmunoblot and IFA analyses confirmed the expression of the two putative P. falciparum K+ channels (PfK1 and PfK2). PfK1 is expressed in all asexual stage parasites, predominantly in late stages and localizes to the RBC membrane. Conversely, PfK2 is predominantly expressed in late schizont and merozoite stage parasites and remains primarily localized to the parasite. Repeated attempts to knockout PfK1 and PfK2 expression by targeted gene disruption proved unsuccessful despite evidence of recombinant gene integration, indicating that pfk1 and pfk2 are apparently refractory to genetic disruption.ConclusionPutative K+ channel proteins PfK1 and PfK2 are expressed in cultured P. falciparum parasites with differing spatial and temporal patterns. Eventual functional characterization of these channels may reveal future pharmacological targets.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2015

Inhibition of Cytochrome bc1 as a Strategy for Single-Dose, Multi-Stage Antimalarial Therapy

Allison M. Stickles; Li Min Ting; Joanne M. Morrisey; Yuexin Li; Michael W. Mather; Erin W. Meermeier; April M. Pershing; Isaac P. Forquer; Galen P. Miley; Sovitj Pou; Rolf W. Winter; David J. Hinrichs; Jane Xu Kelly; Kami Kim; Akhil B. Vaidya; Michael K. Riscoe; Aaron Nilsen

Single-dose therapies for malaria have been proposed as a way to reduce the cost and increase the effectiveness of antimalarial treatment. However, no compound to date has shown single-dose activity against both the blood-stage Plasmodium parasites that cause disease and the liver-stage parasites that initiate malaria infection. Here, we describe a subset of cytochrome bc1 (cyt bc1) inhibitors, including the novel 4(1H)-quinolone ELQ-400, with single-dose activity against liver, blood, and transmission-stage parasites in mouse models of malaria. Although cyt bc1 inhibitors are generally classified as slow-onset antimalarials, we found that a single dose of ELQ-400 rapidly induced stasis in blood-stage parasites, which was associated with a rapid reduction in parasitemia in vivo. ELQ-400 also exhibited a low propensity for drug resistance and was active against atovaquone-resistant P. falciparum strains with point mutations in cyt bc1. Ultimately, ELQ-400 shows that cyt bc1 inhibitors can function as single-dose, blood-stage antimalarials and is the first compound to provide combined treatment, prophylaxis, and transmission blocking activity for malaria after a single oral administration. This remarkable multi-stage efficacy suggests that metabolic therapies, including cyt bc1 inhibitors, may be valuable additions to the collection of single-dose antimalarials in current development.


Mbio | 2017

The Toxoplasma Centrocone Houses Cell Cycle Regulatory Factors

Anatoli Naumov; Stella Kratzer; Li Min Ting; Kami Kim; Elena S. Suvorova; Michael W. White

ABSTRACT Our knowledge of cell cycle regulatory mechanisms in apicomplexan parasites is very limited. In this study, we describe a novel Toxoplasma gondii factor that has a vital role in chromosome replication and the regulation of cytoplasmic and nuclear mitotic structures, and we named this factor ECR1 for essential for chromosome replication 1. ECR1 was discovered by complementation of a temperature-sensitive (ts) mutant that suffers lethal, uncontrolled chromosome replication at 40°C similar to a ts mutant carrying a defect in topoisomerase. ECR1 is a 52-kDa protein containing divergent RING and TRAF-Sina-like zinc binding domains that are dynamically expressed in the tachyzoite cell cycle. ECR1 first appears in the unique spindle compartment of the Apicomplexa (centrocone) of the nuclear envelope in early S phase and then in the nucleus in late S phase where it reaches maximum expression. Following nuclear division, but before daughter parasites separate from the mother parasite, ECR1 is downregulated and is absent in new daughter parasites. The proteomics of ECR1 identified interactions with the ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation machinery and the minichromosome maintenance complex, and the loss of ECR1 led to increased stability of a key member of this complex, MCM2. ECR1 also forms a stable complex with the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)-related kinase, T. gondii Crk5 (TgCrk5), which displays a similar cell cycle expression and localization during tachyzoite replication. Importantly, the localization of ECR1/TgCrk5 in the centrocone indicates that this Apicomplexa-specific spindle compartment houses important regulatory factors that control the parasite cell cycle. IMPORTANCE Parasites of the apicomplexan family are important causes of human disease, including malaria, toxoplasmosis, and cryptosporidiosis. Parasite growth is the underlying cause of pathogenesis, yet despite this importance, the molecular basis for parasite replication is poorly understood. Filling this knowledge gap cannot be accomplished by mining recent whole-genome sequencing data because apicomplexan cell cycles differ substantially and lack many of the key regulatory factors of well-studied yeast and mammalian cell division models. We have utilized forward genetics to discover essential factors that regulate cell division in these parasites using the Toxoplasma gondii model. An example of this approach is described here with the discovery of a putative E3 ligase/protein kinase mechanism involved in regulating chromosome replication and mitotic processes of asexual stage parasites. IMPORTANCE Parasites of the apicomplexan family are important causes of human disease, including malaria, toxoplasmosis, and cryptosporidiosis. Parasite growth is the underlying cause of pathogenesis, yet despite this importance, the molecular basis for parasite replication is poorly understood. Filling this knowledge gap cannot be accomplished by mining recent whole-genome sequencing data because apicomplexan cell cycles differ substantially and lack many of the key regulatory factors of well-studied yeast and mammalian cell division models. We have utilized forward genetics to discover essential factors that regulate cell division in these parasites using the Toxoplasma gondii model. An example of this approach is described here with the discovery of a putative E3 ligase/protein kinase mechanism involved in regulating chromosome replication and mitotic processes of asexual stage parasites.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2017

SMITE: an R/Bioconductor package that identifies network modules by integrating genomic and epigenomic information

N. Ari Wijetunga; Andrew D. Johnston; Ryo Maekawa; Fabien Delahaye; Netha Ulahannan; Kami Kim; John M. Greally

BackgroundThe molecular assays that test gene expression, transcriptional, and epigenetic regulation are increasingly diverse and numerous. The information generated by each type of assay individually gives an insight into the state of the cells tested. What should be possible is to add the information derived from separate, complementary assays to gain higher-confidence insights into cellular states. At present, the analysis of multi-dimensional, massive genome-wide data requires an initial pruning step to create manageable subsets of observations that are then used for integration, which decreases the sizes of the intersecting data sets and the potential for biological insights. Our Significance-based Modules Integrating the Transcriptome and Epigenome (SMITE) approach was developed to integrate transcriptional and epigenetic regulatory data without a loss of resolution.ResultsSMITE combines p-values by accounting for the correlation between non-independent values within data sets, allowing genes and gene modules in an interaction network to be assigned significance values. The contribution of each type of genomic data can be weighted, permitting integration of individually under-powered data sets, increasing the overall ability to detect effects within modules of genes. We apply SMITE to a complex genomic data set including the epigenomic and transcriptomic effects of Toxoplasma gondii infection on human host cells and demonstrate that SMITE is able to identify novel subnetworks of dysregulated genes. Additionally, we show that SMITE outperforms Functional Epigenetic Modules (FEM), the current paradigm of using the spin-glass algorithm to integrate gene expression and epigenetic data.ConclusionsSMITE represents a flexible, scalable tool that allows integration of transcriptional and epigenetic regulatory data from genome-wide assays to boost confidence in finding gene modules reflecting altered cellular states.


Infection and Immunity | 2017

The transcription factor NFAT1 participates in the induction of CD4+ T cell functional exhaustion during Plasmodium yoelii infection

Rachel Y. Ames; Li Min Ting; Inessa Gendlina; Kami Kim; Fernando Macian

ABSTRACT Repeated stimulation of T cells that occurs in the context of chronic infection results in progressively reduced responsiveness of T cells to pathogen-derived antigens. This phenotype, known as T cell exhaustion, occurs during chronic infections caused by a variety of pathogens, from persistent viruses to parasites. Unlike the memory cells that typically form after successful pathogen clearance following an acute infection, exhausted T cells secrete lower levels of effector cytokines, proliferate less in response to cognate antigen, and upregulate cell surface inhibitory molecules such as PD-1 and LAG-3. The molecular events that lead to the induction of this phenotype have, however, not been fully characterized. In T cells, members of the NFAT family of transcription factors not only are responsible for the expression of many activation-induced genes but also are crucial for the induction of transcriptional programs that inhibit T cell activation and maintain tolerance. Here we show that NFAT1-deficient CD4+ T cells maintain higher proliferative capacity and expression of effector cytokines following Plasmodium yoelii infection and are therefore more resistant to P. yoelii-induced exhaustion than their wild-type counterparts. Consequently, gene expression microarray analysis of CD4+ T cells following P. yoelii-induced exhaustion shows upregulation of effector T cell-associated genes in the absence of NFAT1 compared with wild-type exhausted T cells. Furthermore, adoptive transfer of NFAT1-deficient CD4+ T cells into mice infected with P. yoelii results in increased production of antibodies to cognate antigen. Our results support the idea that NFAT1 is necessary to fully suppress effector responses during Plasmodium-induced CD4+ T cell exhaustion.


Annual Review of Microbiology | 2018

The Epigenome, Cell Cycle, and Development in Toxoplasma

Kami Kim

Toxoplasma gondii is a common veterinary and human pathogen that persists as latent bradyzoite forms within infected hosts. The ability of the parasite to interconvert between tachyzoite and bradyzoite is key for pathogenesis of toxoplasmosis, particularly in immunocompromised individuals. The transition between tachyzoites and bradyzoites is epigenetically regulated and coupled to the cell cycle. Recent epigenomic studies have begun to elucidate the chromatin states associated with developmental switches in T. gondii. Evidence is also emerging that AP2 transcription factors both activate and repress the bradyzoite developmental program. Further studies are needed to understand the mechanisms by which T. gondii transduces environmental signals to coordinate the epigenetic and transcriptional machinery that are responsible for tachyzoite-bradyzoite interconversion.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017

Rapid diagnostic testing of hospitalized Malawian children reveals opportunities for improved HIV diagnosis and treatment

Theresa Madaline; Sarah E. Hochman; Karl B. Seydel; Alice Liomba; Alex Saidi; Grace Matebule; Wenzhu Mowrey; Bernadette Ann-Marie O'Hare; Danny A. Milner; Kami Kim

Recent World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines recommend antiretroviral therapy (ART) for all HIV-infected people; previously CD4+ T lymphocyte quantification (CD4 count) or clinical staging determined eligibility for children ≥ 5 years old in low- and middle-income countries. We examined positive predictive value (PPV) of a rapid diagnostic test (RDT) algorithm and ART eligibility for hospitalized children with newly diagnosed HIV infection. We enrolled 363 hospitalized Malawian children age 2 months to 16 years with two serial positive HIV RDT from 2013 to 2015. Children aged ≤ 18 months whose nucleic acid testing was negative or unavailable were later excluded from the analysis (N = 16). If RNA PCR was undetectable, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and western blot (WB) were performed. Those with negative or discordant EIA and WB were considered HIV negative and excluded from further analysis (N = 6). ART eligibility was assessed using age, CD4 count, and clinical HIV stage. Among 150 patients with HIV RNA PCR results, 15 had undetectable HIV RNA. Of those, EIA and WB were positive in nine patients and negative or discordant in six patients. PPV of serial RDT was 90% versus RNA PCR alone and 96% versus combined RNA PCR, EIA, and WB. Of all patients aged ≥ 5 years, 8.9% were ineligible for ART under previous WHO guidelines. Improved HIV testing algorithms are needed for accurate diagnosis of HIV infection in children as prevalence of pediatric HIV declines. Universal treatment will significantly increase the numbers of older children who qualify for ART.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2001

Capsaicin Inhibits Jurkat T-Cell Activation by Blocking Calcium Entry Current ICRAC

Bruce S. Fischer; Danmei Qin; Kami Kim; Thomas V. McDonald

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Li Min Ting

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Karl B. Seydel

Michigan State University

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Michael W. White

University of South Florida

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Thomas V. McDonald

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Wenzhu Mowrey

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Anatoli Naumov

University of South Florida

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Andrew D. Johnston

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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